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{{short description|Former Belgian bank}}
{{short description|Former Belgian bank}}
[[File:Foto gebouw Banque Brussel Lambert genomen op 17.06.2002 door Illa De Preter.jpg|thumb|Head office building of Banque Lambert, completed in 1965 on design by [[Gordon Bunshaft]]]]
[[File:Brussels Banque lambert Statue.jpg|thumb|Former head office building of Banque Lambert in [[Brussels]], completed in 1965 (lately [[ING Belgium]]), with the [[Equestrian Statue of Leopold II, Brussels|equestrian Statue of Leopold II]] in the foreground]]


The '''Banque Lambert''' was a significant family-controlled bank in Belgium, with roots going back to 1832 and long associated with the [[Rothschilds]]. It merged in 1975 with [[Banque de Bruxelles]] to form [[Bank Brussels Lambert]], which itself was acquired in 1998 by [[ING Group]].
The '''Banque Lambert''' ({{IPA|fr|bɑ̃k lɑ̃bɛʁ}}) was a significant family-controlled bank in Belgium, with roots going back to 1835 and long associated with the [[Rothschilds]]. It merged in 1975 with [[Banque de Bruxelles]] to form [[Bank Brussels Lambert]], which itself was acquired in 1998 by [[ING Group]].


==Overview==
==19th century==


In 1832, [[Aschaffenburg]]-born banker [[Lazare Richtenberger]] initiated business in [[Brussels]], in the newly created [[Kingdom of Belgium]], as agent of [[James Mayer de Rothschild]].<ref>{{cite book |first=Niall |last=Ferguson |title=The House of Rothschild: Money's prophets, 1798–1848 |location= |publisher=Viking |year=1998 |page=248 |isbn=9780670857685 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BOztAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA248 }}</ref> In 1843, [[Lyon]]-born [[Samuel Lambert]] partnered with Richtenberger and opened a branch in [[Antwerp]]. Following Richtenberger's death in late 1853, the business took the name of {{lang|fr|Lambert, agent Rothschild}}.<ref>{{cite book |first1=Youssef |last1=Cassis |first2=Jacqueline |last2=Collier |title=Capitals of Capital: The Rise and Fall of International Financial Centres 1780–2009 |location= |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2010 |page=34 |isbn=9780521144049 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Vfpe5Sh70dMC&pg=PA34 }}</ref>
In 1835,<ref>{{cite web |website=The Rothschild Archive |title=Related family papers: Lambert family |url=https://guide-to-the-archive.rothschildarchive.org/rothschild-family-collection/depts/related-family-papers/related-family-papers-lambert-family }}</ref> [[Aschaffenburg]]-born banker [[Lazare Richtenberger]] initiated business in [[Brussels]], in the recently created [[Kingdom of Belgium]], as agent of [[James Mayer de Rothschild]] under the name {{lang|fr|Richtenberger, agent Rothschild}}. In 1838 Richtenberger married Charlotte née Neymer, widow Low Levy. Her son-in-law, [[Lyon]]-born [[Samuel Lambert]], moved to Brussels and partnered with Richtenberger, upon which the business became {{lang|fr|Lambert-Richtenberger, agent Rothschild}}.{{R|AMD|p=1}} In the early 1840s, Lambert opened a branch in [[Antwerp]]. Following Richtenberger's death in late 1853, the business took the name of {{lang|fr|Lambert, agent Rothschild}}.<ref>{{cite book |first1=Youssef |last1=Cassis |first2=Jacqueline |last2=Collier |title=Capitals of Capital: The Rise and Fall of International Financial Centres 1780–2009 |location= |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2010 |page=34 |isbn=9780521144049 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Vfpe5Sh70dMC&pg=PA34 }}</ref>


Samuel's son {{ill|Léon Lambert (1851-1919){{!}}Léon Lambert|fr|Léon Lambert (banquier)}} took over the bank's leadership upon Samuel's death in 1875. In 1882 he married {{ill|Zoé Lucie Betty de Rothschild|fr}}, a granddaughter of James de Rothschild, further reinforcing the links between the two families. A prominent member of the Belgian establishment and royal court, he was at times second among all the country's taxpayers, surpassed only by [[Prince Philippe, Count of Flanders]]. He was main banker to [[Leopold II of Belgium|King Leopold II]], both in a personal capacity and for the [[Congo Free State]], which earned him the nickname of "''le banquier du roi''".<ref name=Meuwissen>{{cite web |author=Eric Meuwissen |url=https://www.lesoir.be/art/leon-lambert-banquier-du-roi-lucie-rothschild-la-lamber_t-19960816-Z0CGZ7.html |title=Léon Lambert, banquier du roi - Lucie Rothschild, la Lambert de Bruxelles - Un musée plus riche que celui d'art moderne |website=www.lesoir.be |date={{date|1996/08/16}} }}</ref>
Samuel's son {{ill|Léon Lambert (1851-1919){{!}}Léon Lambert|fr|Léon Lambert (banquier)}} took over the bank's leadership upon Samuel's death in 1875. In 1882 he married {{ill|Zoé Lucie Betty de Rothschild|fr}}, a granddaughter of James de Rothschild, further reinforcing the links between the two families. A prominent member of the Belgian establishment and royal court, he was at times second among all the country's taxpayers, surpassed only by [[Prince Philippe, Count of Flanders]]. He was main banker to [[Leopold II of Belgium|King Leopold II]], both in a personal capacity and for the [[Congo Free State]], which earned him the nickname of "''le banquier du roi''".<ref name=Meuwissen>{{cite web |author=Eric Meuwissen |url=https://www.lesoir.be/art/leon-lambert-banquier-du-roi-lucie-rothschild-la-lamber_t-19960816-Z0CGZ7.html |title=Léon Lambert, banquier du roi - Lucie Rothschild, la Lambert de Bruxelles - Un musée plus riche que celui d'art moderne |website=www.lesoir.be |date={{date|1996/08/16}} }}</ref>


Léon Lambert and his bank also played a critical role in the financing and implementation of Leopold II's projects for the urban transformation of Brussels. In 1876, they helped the king remodel the surroundings of the [[Palace of Laeken]], and later on the creation of the (by then) leafy avenues of the [[Small Ring, Brussels|Small Ring]], the latter together with bankers {{ill|Victor Allard (banker){{!}}Victor Allard|fr|Victor Allard}} and [[Georges Brugmann]]. In 1886, the bank purchased the land for the creation of the monumental [[Avenue de Tervuren]].{{R|Lausberg|p=2}}
In 1885, the bank moved from its former premises on [[Rue Neuve, Brussels|Rue Neuve]] to the former mansion of {{ill|Frédéric d'Ennetières|fr}},<ref name=Meuwissen/> which had been erected in 1850 for aristocrat Auguste de Béthune.<ref>{{cite web |website=Maison de Béthune |title=Terres et propriétés |url=https://www.maisondebethune.org/terres/ }}</ref> In 1899, it participated in the establishment of the [[Banque d'Outremer]] led by [[Albert Thys]], and was its second-largest founding shareholder behind the [[Société Générale de Belgique]].<ref name=BrionMoreau>{{citation |title=Banque d'Outremer (Compagnie Internationale pour le Commerce et l'Industrie) S.A. |author1=René Brion |author2=Jean-Louis Moreau |publisher=BNP Paribas Fortis Historical Centre and Association pour la Valorisation des Archives d'Entreprises asbl / Vereniging voor de Valorisatie van Bedrijfsarchieven vzw |date=October 2008 |url=https://www.bnpparibasfortis.com/docs/default-source/pdf-(en)/history-and-art-heritage/eng-inventaire-banque-d-39-outremer.pdf?sfvrsn=2 }}</ref>{{rp|II}}


The Banque Lambert was instrumental in financing the Belgian participation in [[colonization of the Congo Basin]]. In 1899, it sponsored the establishment of the [[Banque d'Outremer]] led by [[Albert Thys]], and was its second-largest founding shareholder next to the [[Société Générale de Belgique]].<ref name=BrionMoreau>{{citation |title=Banque d'Outremer (Compagnie Internationale pour le Commerce et l'Industrie) S.A. |author1=René Brion |author2=Jean-Louis Moreau |publisher=BNP Paribas Fortis Historical Centre and Association pour la Valorisation des Archives d'Entreprises asbl / Vereniging voor de Valorisatie van Bedrijfsarchieven vzw |date=October 2008 |url=https://www.bnpparibasfortis.com/docs/default-source/pdf-(en)/history-and-art-heritage/eng-inventaire-banque-d-39-outremer.pdf?sfvrsn=2 }}</ref>{{rp|II}}
Léon's son {{ill|Henri Lambert (banker){{!}}Henri Lambert|fr|Henri Lambert (banquier)}} in turn took the bank's reins after his father died in 1919. In 1926, he reorganized the bank and made it more autonomous from the Rothschilds.<ref name=Smets>{{cite book |author=P.-F. Smets |title=Nouvelle Biographie Nationale |date=2012 |publisher=Académie royale des sciences, des lettres et des beaux-arts |location=Brussels }}</ref>{{rp|234}} After Henri Lambert died in 1933, his widow Johanna (Hansi) von Reininghaus led the bank until their son [[Léon Lambert]] took over in 1949 and rebranded the bank as {{lang|fr|Banque Lambert}}.{{R|Smets|page=238}}


==20th century==
Over the next two decades, Léon Lambert engaged in multiple transactions in Belgium and abroad, including early on in 1953 the acquisition of the much larger Brussels-based [[Caisse Générale de Reports et de Dépôts|Banque de Reports et de Dépôts]].<ref name=Encyclopedia>{{cite web |website=Encyclopedia.com |title=Bank Brussels Lambert |url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/books/politics-and-business-magazines/bank-brussels-lambert}}</ref> Léon Lambert also endeavored, albeit with only partial success, to revive the bank's relationship with Rothschild family-affiliated businesses in multiple countries.


Léon's son {{ill|Henri Lambert (banker){{!}}Henri Lambert|fr|Henri Lambert (banquier)}} in turn took the bank's reins after his father died in 1919. As Henri's relationship with the Rothschilds was less close than his father's, the bank evolved from a Rothschild agent to a correspondent relationship, and in 1926 it was reorganized as a joint-stock company, {{lang|fr|Banque H. Lambert}}, in which Henri Lambert held the majority of the equity.{{R|AMD|p=2}}<ref name=Smets>{{cite book |author=P.-F. Smets |title=Nouvelle Biographie Nationale |date=2012 |publisher=Académie royale des sciences, des lettres et des beaux-arts |location=Brussels }}</ref>{{rp|234}} After Henri Lambert died in 1933, his widow Johanna (Hansi) von Reininghaus maintained the bank in activity but on a gradually reduced business footprint. In 1934, new Belgian banking legislation forced a separation of the bank's equity investments into a separate entity, the {{lang|fr|Mutuelle Lambert}}.{{R|AMD|p=2}} During the dark years of [[German occupation of Belgium during World War II]] Hansi and her teenage son, named [[Léon Lambert|Léon]] like his grandfather and born in 1928, lived in Switzerland then in the United States. Following the war's end, the bank was again reorganized in 1946 into a partnership ({{lang-fr|société en commandite simple}}) as {{lang|fr|Banque H. Lambert (de Lhoneux, De Bruyn et Cie)}}, with reference to its then partners Guy de Lhoneux and Paul De Bruyn. By then it had shrunk to just ten employees.{{R|AMD|p=3}}
In 1956, the old {{lang|fr|Hotel d'Ennetières}} that hosted the Banque Lambert's head office was destroyed by accidental fire. Léon Lambert had it rebuilt on an expanded footprint with a radical design by American architect [[Gordon Bunshaft]], thus creating one of the icons of modernist architecture in Brussels. On the top floor of the new building, Léon Lambert reserved space for his own apartment decorated with a rich collection of contemporary art. The building was later expanded on the rear side in identical style, and has served since 1998 as the head office of [[ING Belgium]].


The young Léon Lambert became chairman of the {{lang|fr|Mutuelle Lambert}} in July 1949 upon his 21st birthday, and partner of the {{lang|fr|Banque H. Lambert (de Lhoneux, De Bruyn et Cie)}} in December 1950, at which point the bank was finally rebranded as {{lang|fr|Banque Lambert}}.{{R|AMD|p=3}}{{R|Smets|page=238}} Léon Lambert convinced a number of talented individuals to join the bank and develop it. In September 1951, [[Camille Gutt]], after completing his term as first Managing Director of the [[International Monetary Fund]], joined the bank as partner, and played a major role in mentoring Léon Lambert until his retirement in late 1964.{{R|AMD|p=4}} In 1953, Jacques Thierry, whose mother was from the Rothschild family, joined and became Lambert's deputy in the 1960s.{{R|AMD|p=6}} In 1960, [[Jean Godeaux]], who had also worked at the IMF between 1949 and 1955, joined the bank and later became its chairman until being appointed to the [[Belgian Banking Commission]] ({{lang-fr|Commission bancaire}}) in 1974.{{R|AMD|p=4}}
As early as the late 1950s, the controlling shareholders of the [[Banque de Bruxelles]], known as the "groupe de Launoit", started considering the option of a merger between that bank and the Banque Lambert. Protracted discussions started in 1968 and became more specific starting in 1972, led on the Banque Lambert's side by Jacques Thierry. In October 1974, in a context of high exchange rates volatility and due to inefficient internal controls, the Banque de Bruxelles incurred a major financial loss of around 3.5 billion [[Belgian franc]]s on foreign-exchange markets,{{R|MaesPeters|p=97}} tilting the balance in the merger talks in favor of Banque Lambert. As a consequence, the latter was able to secure dominant influence in the merged entity in 1975, including the inclusion of the Lambert name in the merged entity's brand of [[Bank Brussels Lambert]].<ref name=MaesPeters>{{cite book |title=Alexandre Lamfalussy : Le sage de l'euro |author=Ivo Maes and Sophie Péters |publisher=Racine |location=Brussels |year=2014}}</ref>{{rp|102}}

Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Léon Lambert involved the bank in multiple transactions and feats of [[financial engineering]] in Belgium and abroad. He moved the family holding company which held a majority stake in the bank, renamed the {{lang|fr|Mutuelle pour le dévelopmement économique et financier}}, to [[Vaduz]] in [[Liechtenstein]].{{R|AMD|p=6}} In 1951, the bank established a Canadian subsidiary, Belgian Overseas Corporations Ltd, and soon afterwards the Amsterdam Overseas Corporations in New York.{{R|AMD|p=6-7}} In 1953, it took over the much larger Brussels-based [[Banque de Reports et de Dépôts]].<ref name=Encyclopedia>{{cite web |website=Encyclopedia.com |title=Bank Brussels Lambert |url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/books/politics-and-business-magazines/bank-brussels-lambert}}</ref> In 1961, the Banque Lambert fostered the creation of the [[Geneva]]-based {{lang|fr|Société financière pour les pays d'outre-mer}} (SFOM) with the aim of pooling its shareholders' investments in Africa;{{R|AMD|p=6}} together with Banque Lambert, SFOM's founders included France's [[Banque Nationale pour le Commerce et l'Industrie]] and its African subsidiary BNCI-Afrique, California-based [[Bank of America]], and [[Milan]]-based [[Banca d'America e d'Italia]], which in 1964 were joined by Germany's [[Commerzbank]].<ref>{{cite web |website=Le Monde |url=https://www.lemonde.fr/archives/article/1965/06/16/rapport-du-conseil-d-administration-exercice-1964_3142672_1819218.html |date={{date|1965/06/16}} |title=Rapport annuel 1964 de la Banque nationale pour le commerce et l'industrie }}</ref> This allowed Banque Lambert to diversify the risk it held through its ownership of the [[Société Congolaise de Banque]] (Socobanque), founded in 1947 by the Banque de Reports et de Dépôts. In 1964, Léon Lambert shook the Belgian business establishment by launching a hostile takeover of [[Sofina]], a prominent listed investment company; even though the bid eventually failed, it marked a milestone in Lambert's reputation as a player in international finance.<ref>{{cite web |website=Le Vif |title=17 novembre 1964 : le jour où Léon Lambert se fit un prénom |author=Vincent Delcorps |date={{date|2016/11/17}} |url=https://www.levif.be/belgique/17-novembre-1964-le-jour-ou-leon-lambert-se-fit-un-prenom/ }}</ref> By 1970, the Banque Lambert was the fourth-largest Belgian bank by total assets, behind the [[Générale de Banque]], [[Banque de Bruxelles]], and [[Kredietbank]].<ref name=CRISP>{{citation |title=L'internationalisation du système bancaire belge |journal=Courrier Hebdomadaire du CRISP |year=1972 |volume=551 |url=https://www.cairn.info/revue-courrier-hebdomadaire-du-crisp-1972-5-page-1.htm }}</ref>{{rp|11}}

As early as 1953, {{ill|Paul de Launoit|nl|Paul Auguste Cyrille de Launoit}}, a prominent businessman who had controlled the [[Banque de Bruxelles]] since the late 1930s, started considering the option of a merger between that bank and the Banque Lambert. Discussions to that effect started in 1969 and continued throughout the early 1970s.{{R|AMD|p=11}} In 1972, Lambert's two holding entities, {{lang|fr|Compagnie Lambert pour l'Industrie et la Finance}} (CLIF) and Cofinter, merged with those controlled by Launoit, Cofinindus and Brufina, to create a single entity named {{lang|fr|Compagnie Bruxelles Lambert pour la Finance et l'Industrie}} (CBLFI), with a combined 10 percent stake in the Banque de Bruxelles and majority control of Banque Lambert.<ref>{{cite web |website=The New York Times |title=Baron Lambert Creates a Giant |author=Clyde H. Farnsworth |date={{date|1972/09/30}} |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1972/09/30/archives/baron-lambert-creates-a-giant-baron-lambert-creates-giant-holding.html }}</ref> In October 1974, in a context of high exchange rates volatility and due to inefficient internal controls, the Banque de Bruxelles incurred a major financial loss of around 3.5 billion [[Belgian franc]]s on foreign-exchange markets,{{R|MaesPeters|p=97}} tilting the balance in the merger talks in favor of Banque Lambert. As a consequence, the latter was able to secure dominant influence in the merged entity in 1975, including the inclusion of the Lambert name in the merged entity's brand of [[Bank Brussels Lambert]],<ref name=MaesPeters>{{cite book |title=Alexandre Lamfalussy : Le sage de l'euro |author=Ivo Maes and Sophie Péters |publisher=Racine |location=Brussels |year=2014}}</ref>{{rp|102}} and the choice of Jacques Thierry as chief executive ({{lang-fr|président du comité de direction}}) of the combined entity. The merger was completed on {{date|1975/06/30}}.{{R|AMD|p=12}}

==Head office building==

In 1885, the bank moved from its former premises on [[Rue Neuve, Brussels|Rue Neuve]] 20,<ref name=Lausberg>{{citation |url=http://sylvielausberg.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/lambert.pdf |title=Léon Lambert : Un homme d'argent au cœur d'or (1851-1919) |author=Sylvie Lausberg |date=2016}}</ref> to a more opulent building at the corner of {{lang|fr|rue d'Egmont}} and {{lang|fr|avenue Marnix}} on the outer small ring. That mansion had been erected in 1850 for aristocrat Auguste de Béthune,<ref>{{cite web |website=Maison de Béthune |title=Terres et propriétés |url=https://www.maisondebethune.org/terres/ }}</ref> and was later used by {{ill|Frédéric d'Ennetières|fr}}, retaining its name as the {{lang|fr|hôtel d'Ennetières}}.<ref name=Meuwissen/> It was acquired in 1883 by the Rothschilds for the Lamberts, a year after Léon's and Lucie's wedding.{{R|Lausberg|p=2}}

In February 1956, the {{lang|fr|Hotel d'Ennetières}} was destroyed by accidental fire. Léon Lambert had it rebuilt on an expanded footprint with a radical design by American architect [[Gordon Bunshaft]]. By its completion in 1965, this immediately became one of the icons of [[modernist architecture]] in Brussels, as Lambert had wished it to be "the most American-looking office building that U.S. architecture could produce".<ref name=Patrimoines>{{cite journal |url=https://patrimoine.brussels/liens/publications-numeriques/versions-pdf/articles-de-la-revue-bruxelles-patrimoines/numero-33/article-33-14 |journal=Bruxelles Patrimoines |title=L'ancienne Banque Lambert : Un canevas parfait pour l'art et le design |author=Gertjan Madalijns |issue=33 |date=Spring 2020}}</ref>{{rp|192}} The interior furnishings were provided by [[Kortrijk]]-based firm {{ill|De Coene Brothers|nl|Kortrijkse Kunstwerkstede Gebroeders De Coene}} under license from [[Knoll, Inc.]] and designed by De Coene's chief designer Jérôme Dervichian.{{R|Patrimoines|p=192}} On the top (eighth) floor of the new building, Léon Lambert reserved space for his own expansive apartment decorated with a rich collection of contemporary art,<ref name=AMD>{{citation |title=Le baron Léon Lambert, un banquier et financier belge d'envergure internationale du XXe siècle |author=Anne-Myriam Dutrieue |url=https://robscholtemuseum.nl/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Anne-Myriam-Dutrieue-Le-baron-Le%CC%81on-Lambert-un-banquier-et-financier-Belge-denvergure-internationale-du-XXe-siecle.pdf |year=2010}}</ref>{{rp|20}} with the rest of the floor hosting executive offices, the board room, and an executive dining venue.{{R|Patrimoines|p=193-194}} The building was expanded in 1992 on the rear side in identical style, in line with sketches made by Bunshaft in the 1970s,{{R|Patrimoines|p=195}} and has served since 1998 as the head office of [[ING Belgium]].


==See also==
==See also==

Latest revision as of 02:56, 8 May 2024

Former head office building of Banque Lambert in Brussels, completed in 1965 (lately ING Belgium), with the equestrian Statue of Leopold II in the foreground

The Banque Lambert (French pronunciation: [bɑ̃k lɑ̃bɛʁ]) was a significant family-controlled bank in Belgium, with roots going back to 1835 and long associated with the Rothschilds. It merged in 1975 with Banque de Bruxelles to form Bank Brussels Lambert, which itself was acquired in 1998 by ING Group.

19th century

[edit]

In 1835,[1] Aschaffenburg-born banker Lazare Richtenberger initiated business in Brussels, in the recently created Kingdom of Belgium, as agent of James Mayer de Rothschild under the name Richtenberger, agent Rothschild. In 1838 Richtenberger married Charlotte née Neymer, widow Low Levy. Her son-in-law, Lyon-born Samuel Lambert, moved to Brussels and partnered with Richtenberger, upon which the business became Lambert-Richtenberger, agent Rothschild.[2]: 1  In the early 1840s, Lambert opened a branch in Antwerp. Following Richtenberger's death in late 1853, the business took the name of Lambert, agent Rothschild.[3]

Samuel's son Léon Lambert [fr] took over the bank's leadership upon Samuel's death in 1875. In 1882 he married Zoé Lucie Betty de Rothschild [fr], a granddaughter of James de Rothschild, further reinforcing the links between the two families. A prominent member of the Belgian establishment and royal court, he was at times second among all the country's taxpayers, surpassed only by Prince Philippe, Count of Flanders. He was main banker to King Leopold II, both in a personal capacity and for the Congo Free State, which earned him the nickname of "le banquier du roi".[4]

Léon Lambert and his bank also played a critical role in the financing and implementation of Leopold II's projects for the urban transformation of Brussels. In 1876, they helped the king remodel the surroundings of the Palace of Laeken, and later on the creation of the (by then) leafy avenues of the Small Ring, the latter together with bankers Victor Allard [fr] and Georges Brugmann. In 1886, the bank purchased the land for the creation of the monumental Avenue de Tervuren.[5]: 2 

The Banque Lambert was instrumental in financing the Belgian participation in colonization of the Congo Basin. In 1899, it sponsored the establishment of the Banque d'Outremer led by Albert Thys, and was its second-largest founding shareholder next to the Société Générale de Belgique.[6]: II 

20th century

[edit]

Léon's son Henri Lambert [fr] in turn took the bank's reins after his father died in 1919. As Henri's relationship with the Rothschilds was less close than his father's, the bank evolved from a Rothschild agent to a correspondent relationship, and in 1926 it was reorganized as a joint-stock company, Banque H. Lambert, in which Henri Lambert held the majority of the equity.[2]: 2 [7]: 234  After Henri Lambert died in 1933, his widow Johanna (Hansi) von Reininghaus maintained the bank in activity but on a gradually reduced business footprint. In 1934, new Belgian banking legislation forced a separation of the bank's equity investments into a separate entity, the Mutuelle Lambert.[2]: 2  During the dark years of German occupation of Belgium during World War II Hansi and her teenage son, named Léon like his grandfather and born in 1928, lived in Switzerland then in the United States. Following the war's end, the bank was again reorganized in 1946 into a partnership (French: société en commandite simple) as Banque H. Lambert (de Lhoneux, De Bruyn et Cie), with reference to its then partners Guy de Lhoneux and Paul De Bruyn. By then it had shrunk to just ten employees.[2]: 3 

The young Léon Lambert became chairman of the Mutuelle Lambert in July 1949 upon his 21st birthday, and partner of the Banque H. Lambert (de Lhoneux, De Bruyn et Cie) in December 1950, at which point the bank was finally rebranded as Banque Lambert.[2]: 3 [7]: 238  Léon Lambert convinced a number of talented individuals to join the bank and develop it. In September 1951, Camille Gutt, after completing his term as first Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, joined the bank as partner, and played a major role in mentoring Léon Lambert until his retirement in late 1964.[2]: 4  In 1953, Jacques Thierry, whose mother was from the Rothschild family, joined and became Lambert's deputy in the 1960s.[2]: 6  In 1960, Jean Godeaux, who had also worked at the IMF between 1949 and 1955, joined the bank and later became its chairman until being appointed to the Belgian Banking Commission (French: Commission bancaire) in 1974.[2]: 4 

Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Léon Lambert involved the bank in multiple transactions and feats of financial engineering in Belgium and abroad. He moved the family holding company which held a majority stake in the bank, renamed the Mutuelle pour le dévelopmement économique et financier, to Vaduz in Liechtenstein.[2]: 6  In 1951, the bank established a Canadian subsidiary, Belgian Overseas Corporations Ltd, and soon afterwards the Amsterdam Overseas Corporations in New York.[2]: 6-7  In 1953, it took over the much larger Brussels-based Banque de Reports et de Dépôts.[8] In 1961, the Banque Lambert fostered the creation of the Geneva-based Société financière pour les pays d'outre-mer (SFOM) with the aim of pooling its shareholders' investments in Africa;[2]: 6  together with Banque Lambert, SFOM's founders included France's Banque Nationale pour le Commerce et l'Industrie and its African subsidiary BNCI-Afrique, California-based Bank of America, and Milan-based Banca d'America e d'Italia, which in 1964 were joined by Germany's Commerzbank.[9] This allowed Banque Lambert to diversify the risk it held through its ownership of the Société Congolaise de Banque (Socobanque), founded in 1947 by the Banque de Reports et de Dépôts. In 1964, Léon Lambert shook the Belgian business establishment by launching a hostile takeover of Sofina, a prominent listed investment company; even though the bid eventually failed, it marked a milestone in Lambert's reputation as a player in international finance.[10] By 1970, the Banque Lambert was the fourth-largest Belgian bank by total assets, behind the Générale de Banque, Banque de Bruxelles, and Kredietbank.[11]: 11 

As early as 1953, Paul de Launoit [nl], a prominent businessman who had controlled the Banque de Bruxelles since the late 1930s, started considering the option of a merger between that bank and the Banque Lambert. Discussions to that effect started in 1969 and continued throughout the early 1970s.[2]: 11  In 1972, Lambert's two holding entities, Compagnie Lambert pour l'Industrie et la Finance (CLIF) and Cofinter, merged with those controlled by Launoit, Cofinindus and Brufina, to create a single entity named Compagnie Bruxelles Lambert pour la Finance et l'Industrie (CBLFI), with a combined 10 percent stake in the Banque de Bruxelles and majority control of Banque Lambert.[12] In October 1974, in a context of high exchange rates volatility and due to inefficient internal controls, the Banque de Bruxelles incurred a major financial loss of around 3.5 billion Belgian francs on foreign-exchange markets,[13]: 97  tilting the balance in the merger talks in favor of Banque Lambert. As a consequence, the latter was able to secure dominant influence in the merged entity in 1975, including the inclusion of the Lambert name in the merged entity's brand of Bank Brussels Lambert,[13]: 102  and the choice of Jacques Thierry as chief executive (French: président du comité de direction) of the combined entity. The merger was completed on 30 June 1975.[2]: 12 

Head office building

[edit]

In 1885, the bank moved from its former premises on Rue Neuve 20,[5] to a more opulent building at the corner of rue d'Egmont and avenue Marnix on the outer small ring. That mansion had been erected in 1850 for aristocrat Auguste de Béthune,[14] and was later used by Frédéric d'Ennetières [fr], retaining its name as the hôtel d'Ennetières.[4] It was acquired in 1883 by the Rothschilds for the Lamberts, a year after Léon's and Lucie's wedding.[5]: 2 

In February 1956, the Hotel d'Ennetières was destroyed by accidental fire. Léon Lambert had it rebuilt on an expanded footprint with a radical design by American architect Gordon Bunshaft. By its completion in 1965, this immediately became one of the icons of modernist architecture in Brussels, as Lambert had wished it to be "the most American-looking office building that U.S. architecture could produce".[15]: 192  The interior furnishings were provided by Kortrijk-based firm De Coene Brothers [nl] under license from Knoll, Inc. and designed by De Coene's chief designer Jérôme Dervichian.[15]: 192  On the top (eighth) floor of the new building, Léon Lambert reserved space for his own expansive apartment decorated with a rich collection of contemporary art,[2]: 20  with the rest of the floor hosting executive offices, the board room, and an executive dining venue.[15]: 193-194  The building was expanded in 1992 on the rear side in identical style, in line with sketches made by Bunshaft in the 1970s,[15]: 195  and has served since 1998 as the head office of ING Belgium.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "Related family papers: Lambert family". The Rothschild Archive.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Anne-Myriam Dutrieue (2010), Le baron Léon Lambert, un banquier et financier belge d'envergure internationale du XXe siècle (PDF)
  3. ^ Cassis, Youssef; Collier, Jacqueline (2010). Capitals of Capital: The Rise and Fall of International Financial Centres 1780–2009. Cambridge University Press. p. 34. ISBN 9780521144049.
  4. ^ a b Eric Meuwissen (16 August 1996). "Léon Lambert, banquier du roi - Lucie Rothschild, la Lambert de Bruxelles - Un musée plus riche que celui d'art moderne". www.lesoir.be.
  5. ^ a b c Sylvie Lausberg (2016), Léon Lambert : Un homme d'argent au cœur d'or (1851-1919) (PDF)
  6. ^ René Brion; Jean-Louis Moreau (October 2008), Banque d'Outremer (Compagnie Internationale pour le Commerce et l'Industrie) S.A. (PDF), BNP Paribas Fortis Historical Centre and Association pour la Valorisation des Archives d'Entreprises asbl / Vereniging voor de Valorisatie van Bedrijfsarchieven vzw
  7. ^ a b P.-F. Smets (2012). Nouvelle Biographie Nationale. Brussels: Académie royale des sciences, des lettres et des beaux-arts.
  8. ^ "Bank Brussels Lambert". Encyclopedia.com.
  9. ^ "Rapport annuel 1964 de la Banque nationale pour le commerce et l'industrie". Le Monde. 16 June 1965.
  10. ^ Vincent Delcorps (17 November 2016). "17 novembre 1964 : le jour où Léon Lambert se fit un prénom". Le Vif.
  11. ^ "L'internationalisation du système bancaire belge", Courrier Hebdomadaire du CRISP, 551, 1972
  12. ^ Clyde H. Farnsworth (30 September 1972). "Baron Lambert Creates a Giant". The New York Times.
  13. ^ a b Ivo Maes and Sophie Péters (2014). Alexandre Lamfalussy : Le sage de l'euro. Brussels: Racine.
  14. ^ "Terres et propriétés". Maison de Béthune.
  15. ^ a b c d Gertjan Madalijns (Spring 2020). "L'ancienne Banque Lambert : Un canevas parfait pour l'art et le design". Bruxelles Patrimoines (33).